About the Author
Laurie Faria Stolarz was raised in Salem, Massachusetts, and educated at Merrimack College in North Andover. She has an MFA in creative writing and a graduate certificate in screenwriting, both from Emerson College in Boston. Visit her Web site at www.lauriestolarz.com.
Llewellyn Publications
Woodbury, Minnesota
White Is for Magic © 2004 by Laurie Faria Stolarz.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
As the purchaser of this e-book, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.
Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.
First e-book edition © 2010
E-book ISBN: 9780738718187
Book design by Rebecca Zins
Book editing by Andrew Karre and Rebecca Zins
Developmental editing by Megan C. Atwood
Cover design by Gavin Dayton Duffy
Cover image © Blendimages/TIPS Images
Llewellyn Publications is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
Llewellyn Publications does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.
Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to current author websites.
Llewellyn Publications
Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
2143 Wooddale Drive
Woodbury, MN 55125
www.llewellyn.com
Manufactured in the United States of America
Acknowledgments
Many thanks to members of my writers group for whom I am truly grateful: Lara Zeises, Steven Goldman, Tea Benduhn, and Kim Ablon Whitney—I couldn’t have written this without your friendship, advice, encouragement, and critiques. I feel truly blessed to be able to work with such talented and amazing individuals.
Also, thanks to the many family members and friends who have been a source of encouragement and support: Mom, Ed, Ryan, Mark, Lee Ann, Neil, Laurie, Delia, MaryKay, Lisa, Jessica, Haig, Sara, Martha, and everyone in the New England Screenwriters Alliance.
A special thanks to Lieutenant Fran Hart of the Burlington, MA, Police Department and Officer Conrad Prosniewski of the Salem, MA, Police Department for answering all my police-related questions. Thanks to Dr. Kathryn Rexrode, MD, for answering my medical questions.
And, finally, thanks to Llewellyn editors Megan Atwood, Andrew Karre, and Becky Zins for such helpful suggestions, endless enthusiasm, and critical comments.
It’s happening again.
The bile at the back of my throat burns. I swallow it down and wipe my bottom lip. My head feels like it’s cracking open, like an archeologist is trapped inside, chipping away at the bones of my skull. I lean back against the cold ceramic wall tiles and try to hold it all together—the puking, the headaches, the nightmares, my sanity.
My world is falling apart.
I stand up from the toilet and stumble over to the mirror. My eyes are red, the skin beneath them a dark, smoky color. I reknot my hair with a rubber band, noticing my chin—wet from puke spooge. I wipe the goo with my fingers as best I can and tuck the stray strands of dark hair behind my ears. What I really need right now is a hot bath, but the knocking in my head is so intense I want nothing more than to just lie down.
After a thorough toothbrushing and several gargles of mouthwash, I stagger my way back through the common area and into the room. Drea and Amber, my roommates, are asleep. I know I could wake them up, that they’d want to know what’s going on—especially after last time—but I almost don’t even want to know myself. Not tonight, anyway.
I grab a lipstick from Drea’s vanity table and the notepad from beside my bed. I flip the notepad open to a fresh sheet and write the letter M across it in the dark-red lipstick, trying my best to make it look smudged, messy—the way it did in my nightmare.
I rip the page free of the pad and stuff it into the pocket of my pajamas. Then I lie back on my bed and pull the covers up over my ears to block out Amber’s snoring. But I still feel sick, the juices in my stomach churning away, bubbling up like molten lava. There’s only one way I’m going to get any rest tonight.
From my spell drawer, a.k.a. the bottom drawer of my dresser, I pull out a stick of incense, a virgin black candle, a razor blade, and some other assorted spell supplies, including a bunch of red grapes courtesy of Drea’s mini-fridge. I collect it all inside my terra-cotta pot and stand up to leave. Except my head is throbbing. I sit back down and peek over at Amber and Drea, in their bunkbeds, the light of the waxing moon casting a shadow over Amber on the top bunk. She turns over, but she’s still snoring—her mouth arched open, chest heaving, six cherry-red ponytails sticking out from her head. Drea moves her forearm up over her ear in response, her golden-blond hair separated into two perfectly frumpled braids.
I wonder if I should even bother telling them anything. If maybe I’m just overreacting. It’s only happened twice now. And Maura’s birthday is a week from Saturday. So, maybe that’s what’s causing it. Or maybe I’m just coming down with the flu.
The terra-cotta pot tucked under my arm, I grab a pocket flashlight from the drawer and make my way out of the room and through the common area. The door to the boiler room is just out in the lobby.
I travel down the dusty wooden steps using the slender beam of the flashlight to guide my way. I know I could flip on the light switch, but the sudden blast of artificial light would only make my head pound more. Instead, I try to make peace with the darkness; I try to imagine it like crushed velvet, enveloping my skin, inviting me further down the creaking stairs and into the boiler room.
It smells musty down here, like leaking pipes. I try to focus on my breath, but for some reason I’m feeling a bit disconnected. Maybe it’s because I don’t feel well. Or maybe it’s because it’s been a year since my last bout of nightmares, and a part of me is afraid that, this time, I won’t be able to stop it.
I take a deep breath and make my way across the cement floor. There isn’t much down here—an old and rattling boiler, a rusty water tank, dorm room furniture in need of repair, and lots of copper pipes that travel along the ceiling. But it’s a place where I can be alone, where I don’t have to worry about being interrupted or waking anyone up.
I set my supplies down on the altar I’ve set up—an old computer desk with a crack down the middle—and light the stick of incense. I start with the bunch of grapes. I pass it through the incense smoke, making sure it gets fully bathed in the lavender fumes. I continue charging all the ingredients, concentrating on the long, gray swirls that rise up and wash over my skin, focusing on lavender’s ability to soothe.
My stomach gurgles impatiently. I dab my finger with a bit of the oil and touch the top end of the virgin black candle. “As above,” I say. Then I touch the bottom, “So below.” I touch the center, drag my finger upward, and then run it back down, continuing to moisten the candle’s leng
th.
When the candle is fully anointed, I hold it around the base and, with the razor, carve Maura’s name into the wax surface, my fingers shaking slightly from the mere thought of her.
Of what happened.
Of what this all might mean.
I rotate the candle counterclockwise three times, focusing on the idea of riddance, and carve the words “rest in peace” on the opposite side from her name—so the guilt will die from my conscience once and for all.
I light the candle and watch a few seconds as the inky black wax heats up and begins to pool around the wick. Then I take the slip of paper from my pocket and stare down at the M—M for Maura, for Murder, maybe. I really don’t know.
I toss it into the terra-cotta pot and then pluck the grapes from their stems. “Maura, Maura, rest in peace,” I whisper. “May your haunting spirit finally cease.” I toss the grapes into the pot, mash them down with my thumb, and picture the contents of my stomach churning and mixing as the purpley pulp juice smooshes against the tips of my fingers. I chase the grapes with several splashes of peppermint oil, and then mix it all up with my fingers, the minty, candy-cane scent mingling with the breath of lavender, overpowering the smell of grape juice.
“Maura, Maura, rest at last,” I whisper. “You shall not make me repeat the past.” I chant the words over and over again, concentrating on the black candle as it begins to burn Maura away. I concentrate on the mint coating my stomach, soaking up the grape.
After meditating on the spell for several minutes, I hold my watch up to the candlelight—it’s 4:05. I’ll take the candle back to my room and set it by my bed so it has time to burn down completely. I smother what’s left of the incense, spoon the mint and grape mixture into a plastic sandwich bag, and collect everything inside the pot. Thankfully, I feel my stomach begin to ease. Maybe now I’ll be able to get some sleep.
I grab everything and am just about to make my way back upstairs when I hear a banging noise coming from the corner, by the water tank.
“Hello?” I stand up, the wheels of my broken chair squeaking back against the cement. I aim the flashlight out in front of me, but the beam is too narrow to see much in the darkness. I take a few steps toward the tank, noticing the window just behind it is open a crack.
There’s a shifting against the floor, like someone taking a step.
“Hello?” I repeat. “Who’s there?” My hands shake. My heart tightens. I try to tell myself that it’s probably just someone who forgot her key. Probably someone who decided to sneak in since the resident director locks the door at midnight.
Closer now. The tank is just a few feet away—just out of reach. “Come out NOW!”
“Stacey?” says a male voice from behind the tank. “Is that you?”
My mouth trembles open. I don’t know that voice. It’s not Chad’s voice. Not PJ’s, either. It doesn’t belong to anyone I recognize.
“Stacey?” he repeats. His shadow on the wall moves toward me. I panic. The flashlight tumbles from my grip, the terra-cotta pot slips from under my arm, and I hear it smash against the floor.
I whirl around and run for the stairs. The sudden motion causes the candle flame to flicker out, leaving me in complete darkness. I can hear him behind me, his feet hitting against the cement floor with each stride.
“Wait!” he shouts. His voice is followed by a clanging sound, like maybe he crashed into something.
I trip up the stairs, my chin smacking down against the wooden step, wax dripping on my fingers and burning my skin. I grapple my way up, on hands and knees, toward the boiler room door, but I can’t quite find the knob.
“Don’t run away from me, Stacey.” His voice is frantic and insistent.
Wrestling up another step, I impale my knee on something sharp. A nail. A splinter maybe. I hear myself whimper. My stomach turns. Bile coats the insides of my mouth. His footsteps are following me up the stairs. I pull my knee back and hear a cracking sound, like wood. I reach up for the doorknob, this time able to wrap my fingers around it.
The knob turns but the door won’t open, like something is barring it. Like someone wants to trap me inside.
I twist and turn the knob, pound at the door. “Help!” I shout, over and over again. I pivot as best I can and throw the candle—hard—toward his voice. I hear him cry out.
I try at the doorknob again. This time it opens. It’s Amber; she’s let me out. I whip the door closed behind us and grab Amber by the arm.
When we get back to the room the lights are on and Drea is sitting up in bed. “Are you guys all right?”
But I’m breathing so hard, my heart pounding like a fist, that I can’t answer.
“Stacey’s gone completely whacked,” Amber says, closing and locking the door behind us. “I found her Nightmare-on-Elm-Streeting in the boiler room. Maybe slasher flicks are not such a nifty idea before bed.”
“What are you talking about?” Drea asks.
“A guy,” I say, gaining my breath. “There was some guy down there.”
“Who? Freddie Krueger?” Amber giggles.
“No,” I say. “I’m serious. I don’t know who it was. They locked me down there somehow. I was trapped.”
“Wait,” Drea says. “Start over. What happened?”
“This is what trapped you,” Amber says. She plucks a big fat pencil from her pajama pocket. “It was wedged underneath the door. Probably got kicked there by accident.”
“I’m gonna call Keegan,” I say.
Keegan is the resident director in charge of our dorm. She’s basically this granola-and-yogurt-eating, Birkenstock-wearing throwback from the sixties, complete with yoga mat and tie-dye apparel. But she is a huge improvement over Madame Discharge, the resident director for the underclasswomen dorms.
I pick up the phone, but Amber nabs it and clicks it off before I can dial.
“You’re not gonna go all schoolmarm on us, are you?” She holds the phone behind her back.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Think about it.” Amber twirls one of her mini-ponytails in thought. “It was probably just somebody’s juicey downstairs—you know, sneaking in for some cuddle. Wouldn’t you be upset if Chad was sneaking in to ladle with you, and someone ratted him out?”
“Don’t you mean spoon?” Drea asks.
“Not the way I do it.” Amber arches her eyebrows up and down.
“Give me the phone NOW!” I insist.
“Why are you being all wiggy? The boiler room is where everybody sneaks in—guys, guests after midnight, people carrying curious liquids,” Amber smiles. “Why ruin everybody’s fun by finking to the RD?”
“Maybe I just don’t think people should be sneaking in,” I say. “Or locking people down in a basement.”
“Are you kidding?” Amber says. “One of the benefits of the senior houses is that people can sneak in. Plus, you were penciled in, not locked in. And it was purely an accident.”
“He didn’t try to attack you or anything, did he?” Drea interrupts. “Wait—what happened to your knee?”
I look down. My pajamas are ripped; there’s a giant splinter sticking out through the belly of one of the gingerbread-cookie men patterned across the flannel fabric. But my fingers hurt just as much; there are bits of wax caked to the skin. I break one of the leaves off the aloe plant by the window. The clear, syrupy goo oozes from inside the thick, green plant flesh; I apply the goo to the hardened wax droplets to help soothe the burn.
“What the hell happened to you?” Drea moves toward the edge of the bed, her perfectly toned, tanning-bed legs sticking out from a school T-shirt, the giant Hillcrest letters stretched across her chest. She stares at my waxy fingers.
“Candle wax,” I say. “My candle blew out when I started running.”
“You know,
Stacey,” Amber begins, “your primitive living thing does have its charm, but modern electricity is way cooler.”
Amber’s sarcasm spares me the trouble of explaining my knee.
“Maybe we should call someone to look around a bit,” Drea says. “Just to be sure.”
Amber tosses me the phone. “Go ahead if you want, but it was probably just some prank. You know, some Michael-Meyers wannabe, inspired by tonight’s horror movie marathon. I don’t know what Student Activities was thinking, especially considering we’re coming up on the one-year anniversary. Case in point.” Amber pulls an envelope from the pocket of her pajamas. It has my name, Stacey Brown, written across the front.
“Not again.” Drea rolls her eyes and sinks back in her bed.
“Someone slid it under our door tonight,” Amber says, tearing at the seal. “One of the ghost groupies, no doubt.” She unfolds the paper and reads the message aloud: “Five days till death.”
“Great,” I say.
“Oh, and someone’s drawn a cute little knife here beside your name.” Amber flashes me the ink sketch.
“How is a knife cute?” Drea asks.
“It has a curly handle.” Amber points out the stylish
detail. “See what I mean? This stupid school is full of immature urchins with nothing better to do.”
It’s true we’ve had our share of pranks this year—phone calls, “I’M WATCHING YOU!” notes stuffed in our mailboxes, the occasional hockey mask or pool of ketchup blood left outside our door or window. All because of last year.
Last year, I was having nightmares—nightmares that turned out to be premonitions, forewarning me that Drea was going to be killed. And then all this stuff started happening. Drea was getting these weird phone calls from some guy who wouldn’t tell her his name. And then she started getting these notes and packages, telling her he was coming for her. In the end we were able to save Drea from Donovan, a guy she had known since the third grade, a guy we all knew as the one who would be crushing on her until the day he died. Of course, he wasn’t the one who ended up dead.